Although British Columbia is seeing coronavirus (COVID-19) case counts drop province-wide, and the lowest daily new case numbers since last fall, major grocery chains are still reporting employee virus cases affecting stores in Â鶹´«Ã½Ó³»and surrounding municipalities.
Loblaw Companies Ltd, the parent company of Real Canadian Superstore, No Frills, Shoppers Drug Mart, and other local chains, provided updates to its June 3 to 6, indicating seven cases at the following six store locations in the Metro Â鶹´«Ã½Ó³»region:
- Shoppers Drug Mart, 1306 Lonsdale Avenue, North Vancouver: Employee last worked May 30
- Lonsdale City Market, 1650 Lonsdale Avenue, North Vancouver: Employees last worked May 24, 26
- Real Canadian Superstore, 3000 Lougheed Hwy., Coquitlam: Employee last worked May 27
- Real Canadian Superstore, 1301 Lougheed Highway, Coquitlam: Employee last worked May 29
- Dean's No Frills Vancouver, 4508 Fraser Street, Vancouver: Employee last worked May 30
- Shoppers Drug Mart, 102-22441 Dewdney Trunk Road, Maple Ridge: Employee last worked June 2
While T&T Supermarket is owned by Loblaw, the Canadian Asian grocery chain lists its COVID-19 cases . T&T has not had any cases in any of its British Columbia stores in the last 14 days.
T&T is now announcing on its website the percentage of its staff nationwide that has received at least one dose of a COVID-19 vaccine. As of June 4, the grocery company reports 88% of its staff have had their first shots, a figure above the national and provincial average.
Last week, one T&T store in Richmond sparked debate about vaccination status and privacy after the Yaohan Centre location posted its store staff vaccination rate on a sign outside the business.
Sobeys, Inc., which operates familiar grocery stores Safeway and Thrifty Foods and is the franchisor of discount grocery chain FreshCo in B.C. has not reported any cases in the Lower Mainland region in June. The company, however, did report cases at a Thrifty Foods in Victoria and a Safeway in Kelowna.